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Serial killer suspect found dead after 35 years

The man, nicknamed "Le Grele" ("pockmarked"), had been wanted by police since the 1980s for the murder and rape of young girls, but was never caught.

AFP
Paris, France
Fri, October 1, 2021

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Serial killer suspect found dead after 35 years A gendarme checks a vehicle on December 8, 2020 on the road to the castle of Sautou which belonged to Michel Fourniret, near Donchery, northeastern France, where French serial killer is accused to have held captive and murdered nine-year-old Estelle Mouzin. New excavations began on December 7 to find the body of Estelle Mouzin. Fourniret, jailed for life in May 2008 for the murder of seven girls and young women, has been charged over Mouzin's disappearance. Fourniret admitted that he acquired the 'Chateau du Sautou' with stolen gold he recovered from the 'Gang des postiches' or 'Wig Gang'. (France/Francois Lo Presti)

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serial killer suspected in some of France's oldest unsolved cases has been found dead after 35 years on the run, just as police were closing in on his identity.

The man, nicknamed "Le Grele" ("pockmarked"), had been wanted by police since the 1980s for the murder and rape of young girls, but was never caught.

He was wanted for a list of crimes committed in the 1980s and 90s, including rape of minors, murder, attempted murder, armed robbery and kidnapping of minors, Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau said in a statement late Thursday.

The man, identified as Francois Verove, committed suicide in a rented apartment, leaving a written confession, a source close to the case told AFP.

In the most notorious case, he was suspected of raping and murdering an 11-year-old girl named Cecile who was found dead in the basement of the building where she lived in the 19th arrondissement of Paris.

He is also believed to have strangled a couple to death in the central Marais district of the capital in 1987.

Over the years, investigators came to believe that the suspect may have been part of the Gendarmerie -- armed forces in charge of internal security -- at the time of the crimes, and established a DNA profile of him.

In recent months, an investigating magistrate had begun questioning around 750 gendarmes who had been deployed in the Paris region at the time.

One of them was Verove, a 59-year-old man living in the south of France, who was sent a summons on September 24 but then was reported missing by his wife three days later.

He was found dead on Wednesday in Grau-du-Roi, a fishing village on the Mediterranean coast, a prosecutors statement said.

He was a former gendarme, who later became a police officer and then retired, it said.

Police took a DNA sample from the body and found that it matched the genetic profile found at several of the crime scenes.

According to local media, Verove mentioned "past impulses" in a letter he left behind, which he had since brought "under control", and said he had committed no crimes after 1997. The murder confession contained no specifics, they said.

In 1986, police had published a police sketch based on witness statements that showed a man of around 25 years old, six feet tall with light-brown hair, and with visible traces of acne on his face.

A lawyer for Cecile's family, Didier Seban, thanked police for their work but also told AFP that it was "painful to know that the criminal took his secrets with him".

According to the Parisien newspaper, Verove is also the suspect in another murder near Paris, of 19-year-old Karine Leroy, in 1994 in the city of Meaux.

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